MG42 Machine Gun

This machine gun features original German-manufactured parts
mounted on a dummy receiver.

During the early 1930s, the German Army's Ordnance Office sought
a general-purpose machine gun but were dissatisfied with those
available at the time. Among the features that the Army required
were quick-change barrels, a belt-feed system, and various mounts,
sights, and magazine boxes that would enable the new machine gun to
serve a variety of functions including use in aircraft,
anti-aircraft and armored vehicles, as well as for cover fire or
continuous fire in infantry support roles.

Ordnance officials requested that Mauserwerke collaborate with
Rheinmetall to modify and improve the latter firm's MG30. Mauser
also called on small-arms designer Louis Strange for assistance in
a re-design of his Solothurn Rh29 machine gun bolt mechanism. The
MG34 was the result of this cooperative effort.

Developed in 1932-33, the MG34 (Maschinengewehr 1934) was the
standard machine gun of Nazi military forces between 1935 and 1943
and was manufactured by several firms including Mauser-Werke A.G.
and Steyr-Daimler-Puch. Chambered for the 7.92 x 57mm Mauser
cartridge, this selective-fire recoil-operated gun had a rate of
fire of 900 rounds per minute and could be fed by either a 50-round
continuous-link belt or a 75-round saddle drum magazine.

The modified Strange bolt featured a rotating head with locking
lugs and carrier rollers. These rollers rode in curved cam tracks
located inside the receiver to unlock and re-lock the bolt during
the recoil cycle. Changing the barrel was accomplished by holding
the cocking handle to the rear and depressing a locking catch at
the front of the receiver, then rotating the receiver/butt 180
degrees on a pivot point located at the junction of the receiver
and the barrel jacket. An assistant gunner then used a
heat-resistant mitt to slide the barrel from the rear of the barrel
jacket. After insertion of the replacement barrel, the gunner
rotated the receiver to its original position, where it locked into
place.

The MG34 received its baptism of fire with General Francisco
Franco's Nationalist troops during the Spanish Civil War, and some
problems that arose at this time were corrected prior to the German
invasion of Poland in September 1939. After German army units
gained experience with the MG34, they began to request additional
improvements, including an increase in the cyclic rate. In an
effort to meet this request, as well as to simplify the gun's
design, Rheinmetall produced a series of machine guns designated
"MG34/41" for combat trials.

These guns were equipped with a shortened barrel, a braided wire
mainspring, non-quick release cover hinge, an automatic fire-only
trigger, and modifications to the major operating components of the
gun, as well as to the operating handle, butt, and feedplate.
Modifications were such that parts interchangeability with the
original MG34 was no longer possible. This could have presented
major problems had this design entered production, but the results
of field trials showed design changes to be insufficient for formal
adoption. Not without its shortcomings, including its complexity
and a sensitivity to certain environmental factors, the MG34 proved
itself to be a good general purpose machine gun.

Although superseded by the MG42, wartime exigencies ensured that
the MG34 remained in service until 1945. These guns served with
units of the Wehrmacht, Kriegsmarine, and Waffen-SS. The MG34 was
proposed for use with the Luftwaffe as an aircraft machine gun, but
this service considered it both too heavy and inferior to other
designs. Nonetheless, the MG34 served with Nazi air force units as
an anti-aircraft machine gun. The Luftwaffe's choice for an
infantry machine gun was the FG42 (Fallschirmjagergewehr 1942; or
"Parachutist's Rifle Model 1942"), which was developed by
Rheinmetall from a design by Louis Strange and manufactured by
Heinrich Krieghoff of Suhl, as well as by the firm of I. C. Wagner,
Mulhausen, Thuringen, Germany.

Fed from a staggered box magazine that was mounted on the left
side of the receiver, the FG42 was a gas-operated machine gun
chambered for the standard 7.92 x 57mm Mauser cartridge and capable
of firing at a rate of 750 rounds per minute. These guns
incorporated a combination of machined steel and stamped sheet
metal, along with wood and plastic furniture. Equipped with a post
front sight and a folding aperture rear sight, the FG42 could also
mount a detachable telescopic sight.

Also included was a reversible spike bayonet that stowed under
the barrel, as well as a forward-folding sheet metal bi-pod that
mounted forward of the front hand guard. These bi-pods exhibited an
unfortunate tendency to collapse during automatic fire and were
replaced in later models by a rear-folding bi-pod that mounted
between the muzzle brake and the front sight.

Combining features of an automatic rifle and light machine gun,
the FG42 was capable of semi-automatic fire with the bolt closed,
or of full auto fire from an open bolt. Slightly shorter than the
standard Wehrmacht Karabiner 98 bolt action rifle, the lightweight
FG42, with its full-power Mauser rifle cartridge, was extremely
unstable in automatic fire mode. Designer Strange reportedly
preferred the smaller 7.9 x 33mm Kurz cartridge for use with this
light machine gun, but was overruled by Germany's political
hierarchy.

Original specifications called for the FG42 to be capable of
launching grenades, but only a few modified examples met this
requirement. Two variants of the FG42 were produced. The Type I is
easily identified by the pronounced rearward rake of the pistol
grip and its metal buttstock, as well as by the previously
mentioned bi-pod mounting location. These early models accommodated
either a 10- or 20-round magazine, while the later Type II version
was designed to accept only the 20-round capacity magazine.
Variations between the two types prevented interchange of their
respective magazines.

Later models also incorporated a conventional profile pistol
grip with a re-designed safety lever, as well as a folding
spring-loaded double door-type dust cover that was located over the
magazine well. The Type II also featured a wooden buttstock and a
re-designed muzzle brake/flash suppressor which did little to
eliminate the impressive fireball that resulted even during
semi-automatic fire. Production of the FG42 began early in 1943,
and approximately 7,000 were manufactured. Of these, roughly 5,000
were of the Type II variant.

In addition to its service with Luftwaffe airborne units, the
FG42 also saw action with the Waffen-SS, most notably during Otto
Skorzeny's airborne assault on the Italian mountaintop stronghold
at Gran Sasso which freed Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from
his captors. Developed during peacetime, the MG34 proved to be
overly complex for effective mass-production by a nation at war.
Its intended role as a universal machine gun required an increased
number of parts, and many of these required forging and machining
to close tolerances. Some ordnance officers realized these
shortcomings even before the start of the Second World War and
proposed a new machine gun that would feature greater tolerances
than those specified in the MG34, making it less sensitive to
foreign matter in the receiver. The new design was to use MG34 feed
belts, mounts, and accessories.

Most significantly, this new gun was to utilize stamped parts
produced by semi-skilled or unskilled labor to simplify manufacture
and to reduce costs. These stampings could be produced by provided
to manufacturers for incorporation into a finished product. Many
German industrial firms opposed this plan, citing an inability to
ensure proper quality control. Nonetheless, ordnance officials
requested proposals from three companies for a machine gun that
would utilize stamped rather than forged parts where possible.

One of these three firms, Dobeln-based Johannes Grossfuss Metall
Fabrik, had never produced any type of firearms, but had extensive
experience with stamped and pressed metal fabrication. All three
firms presented their designs in early 1938. The Grossfuss gun
featured a simple design and an action that was relatively
unaffected by dirt. Although this gun had an unacceptable method of
changing barrels, it was chosen over the gas-operated entries of
Rheinmettal and Stubgen. Several improved versions were produced
and tested, and by 1941, large-scale combat trials were conducted
with 1500 guns.

After a series of favorable reports, these were formally adopted
under the designation MG42. The recoil-operated MG42 employed
several improvements over the earlier MG34, and in accordance with
design requirements, this new machine gun was easier, faster, and
cheaper to produce. The MG42 was originally equipped with a wooden
buttstock, but later models included plastic stocks. The MG42
barrel was several inches shorter than that of the MG34, but both
guns were nearly identical in overall length; however, the MG42 was
lighter than its predecessor.

The Strange rotating bolt utilized in the MG34 was replaced by a
bolt mechanism locked by a pair of rollers that engaged a matching
pair of recesses in the receiver. This design, which was
revolutionary for its time, served both to reduce the weight of the
gun's mechanism, as well as to increase the gun's cyclic rate to
1200 rounds per minute. This devastating rate of fire earned the
MG42 the sobriquet "Hitler's Buzz Saw," coined by U.S. troops who
faced it in battle from the 1942 battle at Kasserine Pass, Tunisia,
through the end of the war.

A second improvement incorporated in the MG42 design was a
roller-driven reciprocating feed arm that was located on the inside
of the receiver cover. This feature has been widely copied in other
machine gun designs. The barrel change-out system that was
unacceptable in the original Grossfuss design was replaced by a
swing-out lever, coupled with a cutaway on the right side of the
barrel jacket. The MG42's flash hider also served as a recoil
booster, thus increasing functional reliability in a battlefield
environment.

Although modifications to the original design were kept to a
minimum during wartime manufacture and typically consisted of minor
alterations, a simplified MG45 was under development prior to the
collapse of the Third Reich. The MG42 proved itself to be an
outstanding machine gun, operating reliably in a variety of
climates ranging from the burning deserts of North Africa to the
frozen steppes of the Soviet Union, as well as in maritime
environments.

Over 400,000 were produced before Germany's unconditional
surrender in 1945. During the post-war period, the MG42 served as
the basis for machine guns produced for use by the armies of
several NATO member nations. Many of these guns featured
interchangeability with original MG42 parts, while incorporating
certain improvements on the original design.